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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Africa
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East Africa
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Tanzania (1)
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East African Rift (1)
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Asia
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Far East
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Canada
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Primary terms
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Africa
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Asia
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atmosphere (1)
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Canada
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Meguma Terrane (1)
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carbon
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C-13/C-12 (2)
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Cenozoic
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metal ores
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metamorphic rocks
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Mexico
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mineral deposits, genesis (1)
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oil and gas fields (1)
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orogeny (1)
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oxygen
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Paleozoic
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sedimentary structures
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secondary structures
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Opening-mode fracturing and cementation during hydrocarbon generation in shale: An example from the Barnett Shale, Delaware Basin, West Texas
ABSTRACT Natural fractures are abundant in the Vaca Muerta Formation and are important because they may affect hydraulic-fracture growth during well stimulation. They contribute to anisotropic mechanical behavior of the reservoir rock and may cause hydraulic fractures to arrest or divert along them by opening or shear. In the subsurface, the Vaca Muerta Formation contains bed-parallel veins (BPV) of fibrous calcite (beef) and bed-perpendicular, completely or partly calcite-filled, opening-mode fractures in multiple orientations. In outcrops of the Vaca Muerta Formation in the Agrio fold-and-thrust belt, BPV and bed-perpendicular fractures are also common. Fracture cement geochemistry (including stable isotopes) and fluid inclusion and clumped isotopic thermometry indicate that the outcrops are similar to the most mature parts of the Vaca Muerta reservoir and can be used as guides for this part of the basin. In outcrops near the Cerro Mocho area, two main bed-perpendicular, opening-mode fracture sets are oriented east–west (oldest) and north–south (youngest), and two additional sets (northeast–southwest and northwest–southeast) are locally present. Fluid inclusion microthermometry, combined with burial-history curves, indicates that BPV in the area of Loncopué formed in the Late Cretaceous during bed-parallel contraction and in overpressure conditions, whereas bed-perpendicular sets formed in the Paleocene. Similar ages were obtained for Puerta Curaco outcrop on the basis of clumped isotope temperatures, although BPV opening may have lasted until the Miocene in this area. BPV are the most common and some of the oldest types of fracture sampled by vertical cores, and stable isotope analyses indicate that they formed deep in the subsurface, probably under conditions similar to those inferred for outcrops. In cores of the Loma Campana block, bed-perpendicular fractures show orientations similar to those in outcrops, although the youngest, north–south set is generally missing. Without appropriate fluid inclusions for microthermometry or oriented cross-cutting relationships in core, fracture timing was established on the basis of a tectonic model. Our model indicates that in the Loma Campana block, fractures preferentially formed in east–west and northeast–southwest orientations in the Early Cretaceous, northeast–southwest in the Late Cretaceous, northwest–southeast in the Cenozoic, and east–west and east-northeast–west-southwest at present. Fracture timing and orientations from this tectonic model, fracture aperture from core, fracture height and length measured in outcrop, and fracture intensity from a geomechanical model calibrated with core and image logs were used to construct discrete fracture network (DFN) models of the subsurface and build specific reservoir development plans.
A history of pore water oxygen isotope evolution in the Cretaceous Travis Peak Formation in East Texas
Degradation of fracture porosity in sandstone by carbonate cement, Piceance Basin, Colorado, USA
Natrocarbonatites: A hidden product of three-phase immiscibility
How Precisely Can the Temperature of a Fluid Event be Constrained Using Fluid Inclusions?
Diagenesis and its impact on a microbially derived carbonate reservoir from the Middle Triassic Leikoupo Formation, Sichuan Basin, China
Fracture porosity creation and persistence in a basement-involved Laramide fold, Upper Cretaceous Frontier Formation, Green River Basin, USA
Fracturing and fluid flow in a sub-décollement sandstone; or, a leak in the basement
Natural hydraulic fracturing of tight-gas sandstone reservoirs, Piceance Basin, Colorado
Natural fractures in shale: A review and new observations
Whole Earth geohydrologic cycle, from the clouds to the core: The distribution of water in the dynamic Earth system
The whole Earth geohydrologic cycle describes the occurrence and movement of water from the clouds to the core. Reservoirs that comprise the conventional hydrologic cycle define the exosphere, whereas those reservoirs that are part of the solid Earth represent the geosphere. Exosphere reservoirs thus include the atmosphere, the oceans, surface water, glaciers and polar ice, the biosphere, and groundwater. Continental crust, oceanic crust, upper mantle, transition zone, lower mantle and the core make up the geosphere. The exosphere and geosphere are linked through the active plate tectonic processes of subduction and volcanism. While the storage capacities of reservoirs in the geosphere have been reasonably well constrained by experimental and observational studies, much uncertainty exists concerning the actual amount of water held in the geosphere. Assuming that the amount of water in the upper mantle, transition zone, and lower mantle represents only 10%, 10%, and 50% of their storage capacities, respectively, the total amount of water in the Earth's mantle (1.2 × 10 21 kg) is comparable to the amount of water held in the world's oceans (1.37 × 10 21 kg). Fluxes between reservoirs in the geohydrologic cycle vary by ~7 orders of magnitude, and range from 4.25 × 10 17 kg/yr between the oceans and atmosphere, to 5 × 10 10 kg/yr between the lower mantle and transition zone. Residence times for water in the various reservoirs of the geohydrologic cycle also show wide variation, and range from 2.6 × 10 -2 yr (~10 days) for water in the atmosphere, to 6.6 × 10 9 yr for water in the transition zone.